Alfred Marzorati

Alfred Frédéric Gérard Marzorati
Royal Commissioner for Occupied East Africa
In office
May 1919  March 1921
Preceded byJustin Malfeyt
Succeeded by(self)
Royal Commissioner of Ruanda-Urundi
In office
March 1921  28 August 1926
Preceded by(self)
Succeeded by(self)
Governor of Ruanda-Urundi and Deputy Governor-General of the Belgian Congo
In office
28 August 1926  5 February 1929
Preceded by(self)
Succeeded byLouis Joseph Postiaux
Personal details
Born(1881-09-28)28 September 1881
Tournai, Belgium
Died11 December 1955(1955-12-11) (aged 74)
Uccle, Belgium
OccupationLawyer and colonial administrator

Alfred Frédéric Gérard Marzorati (28 September 1881 – 11 December 1955) was a Belgian lawyer and colonial administrator. He served at the bar in Brussels, then became a magistrate in the Belgian Congo. During World War I he was a legal advisor to the Belgian forces occupying German East Africa. He was appointed royal commissioner in charge of the Belgian mandate of Ruanda-Urundi in 1919, and strongly supported the 1926 administrative union between these territories and the Belgian Congo.

Marzorati left Africa due to health problems in 1929, and retired from the colonial service in 1931 to take up an academic career, but continued to play an active role in Belgian colonial affairs for the remainder of his life. He was opposed to bringing European settlers to Africa, and saw Belgium's role as being to help the indigenous people develop a modern economy and political structure which could become fully autonomous.